Dark Mountain: Scenography for the end of the world and a more-than-human future

Weaving together the collective experience of several Australian scenographers and dramaturgs, this article examines how performance-making practices and scenographic design processes can be reshaped by our deepening understanding of the ecology that surrounds us. As practitioner-scholars, we are tr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Theatre and Performance Design
Main Authors: Kelly, Kathryn, Rixon, Tessa, Neideck, Jeremy, Pike, Shane, Brumpton, Anthony
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Taylor & Francis 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.qut.edu.au/214296/
Description
Summary:Weaving together the collective experience of several Australian scenographers and dramaturgs, this article examines how performance-making practices and scenographic design processes can be reshaped by our deepening understanding of the ecology that surrounds us. As practitioner-scholars, we are trying to consider how new ‘practice actions’ in scenography can be increasingly ecologically responsive. This is a very particular endeavour in Australia where landscape is contested, First Nations claims are ignored, and denial of the climate emergency is official government policy. Over a decade ago, British artists and environmental activists Paul Kingsnorth and Dougald Hine founded the Dark Mountain project by publishing a Manifesto that warned of an impending, headlong rush into the abyss of ecocide. Heeding their call as our starting provocation, this article offers two case studies that demonstrate possible ecoscenographic approaches in Australian performance-making. While the case studies raise as many questions as they provide answers, they demonstrate how keeping environmentalism at the forefront of creativity can help us shape a more-than-human future in an ecologically fragile world.